Beyond the ‘two cultures’ in the teaching of disaster: or how disaster education and science education could benefit each other

Educational Philosophy and Theory 52 (13):1434-1448 (2020)
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Abstract

Looking at the current discourse on how to teach disaster, one apparent gap is that the scientific aspect of disaster is discussed and taught mostly in isolation from its human aspect. Disaster educators seem to be primarily interested in addressing issues such as social vulnerability, community resilience, personal action-related knowledge and emotion rather than the scientific basis of disasters, whereas science educators often fail to make connections between the scientific accounts of disasters and the social and political contexts that surround them. In this theoretical paper, I claim that this disconnect is problematic and that overcoming it is a key to understanding and teaching disaster in a more nuanced and comprehensive manner. Drawing primarily on science and technology studies (STS) on disaster, I explore the potential of interpreting disasters as failures of socio-technical systems, which helps us unearth the inner workings of the complex network of science, technology and society in the wake of calamities. STS challenges the dichotomous understanding of the material and social worlds and takes a view that they shape each other to constitute socio-technical systems. Taking such an approach to disaster allows a synthetic understanding of the natural, technological and human-made disasters that we are faced with in the age of uncertainty and complexity. Based on the ideas of STS and examples of recent disasters in East Asian countries, I argue that disaster education and science education can cross-pollinate in tackling the post-disaster hardship and cultivating responsible citizens.

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Forgive, forget or regret? The Dao of education in times of catastrophe.Ruyu Hung - 2020 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 52 (13):1358-1363.

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References found in this work

Pandora’s hope.Bruno Latour - 1999 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
Philosophy of technology: an introduction.Val Dusek (ed.) - 1993 - Oxford: Blackwell.

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